The event in Chapter 1 reminds Jonas about the importance of rules in the community
What is the opening ritual of telling dreams and sharing feelings; shows rules govern daily life
Jonas’s closest friend mentioned in Chapter 1 and what is his personality trait
Who is Asher; playful and sometimes clumsy with words
The overall mood of Jonas’s community
What is controlled or orderly
During the Ceremony of Twelve, the turning point for Jonas
What is Jonas is selected to be the new Receiver of Memory
"Release” in the context of the community
What is the public ceremony where someone is excluded from the community
The significance of the morning ritual of sharing feelings
What is the morning ritual where family members share dreams and feelings to maintain openness and conformity
The character who is the speaker at the ceremonies and explain her role
The Chief Elder; leads ceremonies and makes official announcements
Rules about families or family units
What is families are created by assignment; parents and children are matched by the committee
The two things Jonas does or notices at the Ceremony that show his nervousness or anticipation
What are he fiddles, pays close attention to the Chief Elder, feels anxious and different from peers
“Stirrings” as used in the story and how the community handles them
What are puberty-related feelings/attractions; they are suppressed with medication and discussed in ritual
The morning ritual where family members share dreams and feelings to maintain openness and conformity
What is rules and rituals prevent conflict and emotional pain by keeping sameness and predictability
Asher has notable incidents that happens to him in early chapters that shows community expectations about language and behavior
What is Asher mistakenly uses imprecise language and is publicly chastised. "distraught" when late for school; “smack” instead of "snack"
The unique way careers/roles are assigned in this society
What is assignments are given at the Ceremony of 12 based on observed skills, not personal choice
The moment Jonas is singled out during the Ceremony and how the crowd reacts
What is The Chief Elder speaks directly to Jonas, explains his special selection; crowd reacts with stunned silence and applause
"Precise language” refer to this in the community, and it's importance
What is using exact, approved words to avoid ambiguity and emotional misinterpretation; it promotes sameness
The Ceremony of Twelve
What is the Ceremony of Twelve assigns each child their lifelong role based on observed behavior and aptitude.
Fiona’s role in Jonas’s life and one detail about her assignment or personality
What is a friend and volunteer at the House of the Old; gentle, calm, likely to be assigned a caregiving role
Ways the community suppresses individuality
What are standardized clothing, gender-neutral toys, sameness in landscape; public rituals like telling feelings or dreams, public formal apologies
After Jonas’s assignment is announced, the changes that occur in his feelings or behavior
What are Jonas feels isolated, honored, and confused; others treat him differently; he begins to reflect on differences
"Assignment” are this and differ from a job in our society, how
What is officially designated lifelong role assigned by the community, not chosen by individuals
How memory is controlled or withheld in Jonas’s community and one reason the community might do this.
What is memories are held by specific roles (the Receiver/Giver); the community withholds memories to prevent suffering and maintain sameness.
the character known as The Giver and how Jonas first learns about the Giver’s role.
Who is The Giver (Receiver of Memory) holds past memories; Jonas learns of the Giver’s role when he’s selected as the new Receiver
How the community controls emotions and choices through language and ritual
What are through required rituals (telling dreams), assigned roles, and carefully controlled language (precise words), the community limits emotional variance and choice
The major events from Chapters 1–10 that set up Jonas’s role and the novel’s central conflict
What is the introduction of the ordered society, daily rituals, the Ceremony system, Jonas’s friendships, and his unexpected selection as Receiver, setting up his journey.
Three community-specific words or phrases from and the significance
What are: Release (the ritual ending a life in the community), Receiver (person chosen to hold memories), Sameness (policy to eliminate difference); each shapes how people live and limits suffering/choice **other acceptable answers